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HOW TO GROW FROST RESISTANT VEGETABLES GARDEN TOUR #8 NEW YORK JUNGLE GARDEN 11/24/2010

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Uploaded by on Nov 25, 2010

LATE FALL TOUR OF OUR ORGANIC VEGETABLE GARDEN. SECRETS HOW TO EXTEND YOUR GARDEN SEASON WITH FROST RESISTANT CROPS AND HOW TO RIPEN TOMATOES AFTER FROSTS HAVE HIT.

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Uploader Comments (ledburnerss)

  • butternuts are the best! but acorn is great too. good job!

  • @mechanicalbu11 Wish I could grow acorn squash well, they attract squash vine borers very badly. They also attract cucumber beetles badly so they die from bacterial wilt from beetle bites. I only get minimal harvest. Only constant weekly spraying of malithion prevents it, which I refuse to do. Butternut has none of these problems so I get 100 pounds per 120 square feet and they keep great in the garage for 5 months at 45 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Click on my name for more gardening secrets.

  • wow nice harvest. your garden still looks great... thanks 4 sharing

  • @SteveHarpster

    I just emailed your Channel and your great alarm system stickers web site to friends in Vegas and Cal.

    Please check out more of my videos by clicking on my name. Please click on my little adds too :-)

  • Howdy!!! Really enjoyed your videos and information.. you are a blast to listen to and watch ! Keep us posted on this years crops 2011... continued success!

  • @kittyhawk1027

    Thank you so much for the kind comments. I put a load of time into recording the whole growing season 2010.

    I hope you see them all by clicking on my name. This year I've got a good garden as well but struggling with lack of work and 85 year old parents. I truly believe organically grown Veggies and herbs help longevity.

    Enjoy and be well.

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  • @kittyhawk1027 thanks.... I will

  • @arnold894

    Stretching our harvesting season is money saved on grocery bills, so I take it very seriously. I kick snow off kale. As for my fish compost, it ends up 70% leaf mold (rotted fall tree leaves) 10% grass cuttings, 10% kitchen waists and 10% fish racks (fish heads bones, guts, all buried deep) and almost NO garden wastes that harbor diseases and pests. I put 2" to 3" inches on all my beds every year and till it in deep. My other magic is rock phosphate and jersey green sand. Good Luck

  • Hi, I have really enjoyed your garden series, you got some massive harvests! You mentioned a fish compost on a few occasions but your compost pile looks like mostly garden waste. Would you mind sharing your secret? I live in CA and the last home I had was full of hard pan but I am going to be moving to a new place with really nice soil. I tired gardening at the last home with mixed results but I am really wanting to be successful in the new home. Thanks!

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